Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Research is fundamental to improving the quality of health care. The need for regulation of research is clear. However, the bureaucratic complexity of research governance has raised concerns that the regulatory mechanisms intended to...

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Main Author: Pollock Kristian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-09-01
Series:BMC Medical Ethics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6939/13/25
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spelling doaj-a461d95cc3d8405680076760d7d700342020-11-25T03:55:36ZengBMCBMC Medical Ethics1472-69392012-09-011312510.1186/1472-6939-13-25Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative researchPollock Kristian<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Research is fundamental to improving the quality of health care. The need for regulation of research is clear. However, the bureaucratic complexity of research governance has raised concerns that the regulatory mechanisms intended to protect participants now threaten to undermine or stifle the research enterprise, especially as this relates to sensitive topics and hard to reach groups.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Much criticism of research governance has focused on long delays in obtaining ethical approvals, restrictions imposed on study conduct, and the inappropriateness of evaluating qualitative studies within the methodological and risk assessment frameworks applied to biomedical and clinical research. Less attention has been given to the different epistemologies underlying biomedical and qualitative investigation. The bioethical framework underpinning current regulatory structures is fundamentally at odds with the practice of emergent, negotiated micro-ethics required in qualitative research. The complex and shifting nature of real world settings delivers unanticipated ethical issues and (occasionally) genuine dilemmas which go beyond easy or formulaic ‘procedural’ resolution. This is not to say that qualitative studies are ‘unethical’ but that their ethical nature can only be safeguarded through the practice of ‘micro-ethics’ based on the judgement and integrity of researchers in the field.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>This paper considers the implications of contrasting ethical paradigms for the conduct of qualitative research and the value of ‘empirical ethics’ as a means of liberating qualitative (and other) research from an outmoded and unduly restrictive research governance framework based on abstract prinicipalism, divorced from real world contexts and values.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6939/13/25Qualitative researchBioethicsEmpirical ethicsMicro ethicsPrincipalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pollock Kristian
spellingShingle Pollock Kristian
Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
BMC Medical Ethics
Qualitative research
Bioethics
Empirical ethics
Micro ethics
Principalism
author_facet Pollock Kristian
author_sort Pollock Kristian
title Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
title_short Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
title_full Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
title_fullStr Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
title_full_unstemmed Procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
title_sort procedure versus process: ethical paradigms and the conduct of qualitative research
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Ethics
issn 1472-6939
publishDate 2012-09-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Research is fundamental to improving the quality of health care. The need for regulation of research is clear. However, the bureaucratic complexity of research governance has raised concerns that the regulatory mechanisms intended to protect participants now threaten to undermine or stifle the research enterprise, especially as this relates to sensitive topics and hard to reach groups.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Much criticism of research governance has focused on long delays in obtaining ethical approvals, restrictions imposed on study conduct, and the inappropriateness of evaluating qualitative studies within the methodological and risk assessment frameworks applied to biomedical and clinical research. Less attention has been given to the different epistemologies underlying biomedical and qualitative investigation. The bioethical framework underpinning current regulatory structures is fundamentally at odds with the practice of emergent, negotiated micro-ethics required in qualitative research. The complex and shifting nature of real world settings delivers unanticipated ethical issues and (occasionally) genuine dilemmas which go beyond easy or formulaic ‘procedural’ resolution. This is not to say that qualitative studies are ‘unethical’ but that their ethical nature can only be safeguarded through the practice of ‘micro-ethics’ based on the judgement and integrity of researchers in the field.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>This paper considers the implications of contrasting ethical paradigms for the conduct of qualitative research and the value of ‘empirical ethics’ as a means of liberating qualitative (and other) research from an outmoded and unduly restrictive research governance framework based on abstract prinicipalism, divorced from real world contexts and values.</p>
topic Qualitative research
Bioethics
Empirical ethics
Micro ethics
Principalism
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6939/13/25
work_keys_str_mv AT pollockkristian procedureversusprocessethicalparadigmsandtheconductofqualitativeresearch
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